Wood and her brothers were actively involved in Theatre in the Park
while growing up, including an appearance by her in the 1987 production
of her father’s internationally renowned musical comedy adaptation of A Christmas Carol when she was just a few months old.[7] Subsequently, she played the Ghost of Christmas Past in several productions at the theater, and she later starred as Helen Keller alongside her mother (who played Annie Sullivan) in a production of The Miracle Worker, under her father’s direction.[8][9]

Career

Early Works: 1994–2000

Wood began her career appearing in several made-for-television films from 1994 onward,[citation needed] also playing an occasional role in the television series American Gothic.
In 1996, Wood’s parents separated and later divorced, and Wood moved
with her mother to her mother’s native Los Angeles County, California.[3][10] After a one-season role on the television drama Profiler, Wood was cast in the supporting role of Jessie Sammler on the television show Once and Again.

Wood made her teenage debut as a leading film actress in 2002’s Little Secrets, directed by Blair Treu,
where she played aspiring 14-year-old concert violinist Emily
Lindstrom. For that role, she was nominated for Best Leading Young
Actress at the Young Artist Awards.[12] That same year, Wood played a supporting role in the Andrew Niccol-directed sciencefiction satirical drama film, S1m0ne, which starred Al Pacino.

Wood’s breakthrough movie role followed with the 2003 film Thirteen.
She played the role of Tracy Louise Freeland, one of two young teens
who sink into a downward spiral of hard drugs, sex, and petty crime. Her
performance was nominated for a Golden Globe Award as Best Actress – Drama and for a Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Award for Best Actress. During the time of Thirteen’s release, Vanity Fair named Wood as one of the It Girls of Hollywood, and she appeared, along with the other actresses, on the magazine’s July 2003 cover.[13] A supporting role opposite Cate Blanchett and Tommy Lee Jones in Ron Howard‘s The Missing, in which she played the kidnapped daughter, Lilly Gilkeson, in a Searchers-style western, followed the same year. Also in 2003 she played the part of Nora Easton in the episode “Got Murder?” of TV series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
In 2005, Wood appeared in the Mike Binder-directed The Upside of Anger, opposite Kevin Costner and Joan Allen,
a well-reviewed film in which Wood played Lavender “Popeye” Wolfmeyer,
one of four sisters dealing with their father’s absence. Her character
also narrated the film.[3]
Wood’s next two starring roles were in dark independent films. In the 2005 Grand Jury Prize Sundance Film Festival nominee Pretty Persuasion, a black comedy/satirical focusing on themes of sexual harassment and discrimination in schools and attitudes about females in media and society,
Wood played Kimberly Joyce, a villainous, sexually active
high-schooler. One critic commented, “Wood does flip cynicism with such
precise, easy rhythms and with such obvious pleasure in naughtiness that
she’s impossible to hate.”[14]

Woods in Down in the Valley

In Down in the Valley, which was directed by David Jacobson, Wood’s character, Tobe, falls in love with an older man, a cowboy who is at odds with modern society (Edward Norton).
Of her performance, it was written that “Wood conveys every bit of the
adamant certainty and aching vulnerability inherent in late
adolescence.”[15]
Wood has commented on her choice of sexually themed roles, saying that
she is not aiming for the “shock factor” in her film choices.[3]
In 2005, Wood starred in the music videos for Bright Eyes‘ “At the Bottom of Everything” and Green Day‘s “Wake Me Up When September Ends“.

2006–present

In September 2006, Wood received Premiere magazine’s “Spotlight Award for Emerging Talent.”[16] Also in 2006, she was described by The Guardian as being “wise beyond her years” and as “one of the best actresses of her generation.”[3]

Across the Universe, a Julie Taymor-directed musical that was nominated for a Golden Globe and an Academy Award and was set in Liverpool, New York City, and Vietnam,
focused on the tribulations of several characters during the
counter-cultural revolution of the 1960s. It was set to the songs of The Beatles.
Wood, who has described the music of The Beatles as a major part of her
life, played Lucy, who develops a relationship with Jude (Jim Sturgess).[20]
The film featured her singing musical numbers and she describes the
role as her favorite, calling director Julie Taymor “one of the most
amazing directors out there.”[21] One critic wrote that “Wood brings much-needed emotional depth.”[22]
Wood provided the voice of an alien named Mala, a mechanically inclined free-thinker, in Battle for Terra, a 2008 computer-animatedscience fiction film
about a peaceful alien planet that faces destruction from colonization
by the displaced remainder of the human race. The film won the 2008
Grand Prize at the Ottawa International Animation Festival. The film
showed at the San Francisco International Film Festival, where she
received an award at the Midnight Awards along with Elijah Wood.[23]

Wood’s in The Life Before Her Eyes

Wood starred in 2008’s Vadim Perelman-directed The Life Before Her Eyes, based on the Laura Kasischke novel of the same name, about the friendship of two teens of opposite character who are involved in a Columbine-like shooting incident at their school and are forced to make an impossible choice. Wood played the younger version of Uma Thurman‘s character, Diana. One critic cited her performance as “hands-down extraordinary”.[24] Wood stated that she intended the film to be the last one in which she played a teenager.[25]
In the same year, she also co-starred in director Darren Aronofsky‘s The Wrestler,[26] winner of the Golden Lion Award for Best Film at the Venice Film Festival, about Randy “Ram” Robinson (Mickey Rourke),
a professional wrestler from the 1980s who is forced to retire after a
heart attack threatens to kill him the next time he wrestles. Wood
played Stephanie, Randy “Ram” Robinson’s estranged daughter. Of her
performance, one critic wrote, “Once her character stops stonewalling
her father and hears him out, Wood provides a fine foil for Rourke in
their turbulent scenes together.”[27]
Wood has a role in Woody Allen‘s Whatever Works,[28] which premiered at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival. She plays the young wife of Larry David‘s[29] character. In May 2009, she played Juliet in six fundraising performances of William Shakespeare‘s Romeo and Juliet at the Theater In The Park.[30] The production was directed by her brother, who also starred.

Wood began dating British actor Jamie Bell in 2005 after they co-starred in the music video for Green Day‘s song “Wake Me Up When September Ends“. They got tattoos of each others’ first initial;[40] in Wood’s case, a “J” on her left ankle.[41] After a year together, the relationship ended in 2006.[42]
Wood later commented that, “We had matching tattoos because we knew our
love would last for ever. Trouble is, it didn’t, things happened, we
split. But I don’t regret the tattoo. It reminds me of a great, great
period in my life.”[43]

Evan Rachel Wood and Marilyn Manson

In January 2007, Wood’s relationship with Marilyn Manson became public.[44] The two met at a party at the Chateau Marmont Hotel; Wood has stated that she was attracted to Manson’s frequent use of black eye liner and once described their relationship as “healthy and loving.”[45] Two portraits of Wood, painted by Manson, have been exhibited at the Celebritarian Corporation Gallery of Fine Art.[citation needed] Wood is also the inspiration behind Manson’s song “Heart-Shaped Glasses“,
and she appeared with Manson in the song’s music video. Manson has said
that Wood’s appearance was the highest-paid music video role ever.[25]
The couple split in November 2008; according to Wood, they “both
decided to take some time apart so [they] could concentrate on work.”[46] They later re-united and it was reported in early January 2010 that the couple was engaged to be married.[47] On August 17, 2010, People magazine reported that the couple had ended their engagement earlier that month.[48]
In summer 2011, Wood was reported to have rekindled her relationship with Jamie Bell, five years after they first parted ways.[49]
Wood wears a diamond ring on her ring finger that often gets mistaken
for an engagement ring, but she has stated on her Twitter: “Sorry to
disappoint, but I have been wearing that diamond on my left hand since I
was 14. It was my aunt’s. Any engagement rumor is false.”
In April 2011, Wood came out as bisexual in an interview with Esquire.[50]